Tuesday, March 19, 2013

All exhibitions and events in the O'Sullivan Art Gallery are free and open to the public.

The O'Sullivan Art Gallery features the work of locally and nationally recognized artists, and has a reputation among artists as a place where their work will be studied and appreciated by students, art critics, other artists, and the general public. Exhibitions and performances at the Gallery all have a lecture/demonstration component, providing genuine dialog between the artist and audience. The setting for this interaction is intimate and informal, encouraging audience participation with questions and discussions. The O'Sullivan Art Gallery is a genuine forum for the celebration of art and ideas in the Jesuit tradition of discussion, learning, and putting theory into practice.

Mr. Regis is just around the corner so stop by the Student Center Lobby to find out more! For questions, stop by the Student Activities Office in the Student Center or contact Ellen Lundwall at elundwall@regis.edu.

The signature program of the Regis University Center For The Study Of War Experience, the Stories From Wartime series, returns for 2013. This series allows Regis students to hear war experiences directly from the veterans who lived them. Hosted and moderated by Rick Crandall, with academic insights from Regis Professors Dan Clayton and Tom Bowie, it provides fascinating insights into how ordinary men and women dealt with the experiences of war and how it shaped their lives.

The general public is invited to join Regis students in this series. Each 2-hour presentation starts at 6PM in the Science Building Ampitheater on the Denver campus. Seating is limited and the public is urged to arrive before 5:30PM for the best chance of being seated. Once the room is full, no additonal spectators can be allowed in the ampitheater.

The Regis University Center for the Study of War Experience, formally inaugurated as an official University program in November 2004, preserves the memories and histories of war veterans to deepen our understanding of what ordinary people do in war. The Center makes this history permanently available to students, teachers, and the general public in an extensive archival collection of videotaped interviews and written testimonies of war veterans. The Center's administrative office and archives are housed in Regis University's Main Hall. To secure its future as an important national repository of war memories, the Center seeks funding to support its ongoing activities. We encourage folks to consider making a gift to the Regis University Center for the Study of War Experience to help us keep these memories alive forever. For information about how you can contribute to the Regis Center's work, please contact Dr. Daniel Clayton at 303-458-4914.